Gotler R S, Flocke S A, Goodwin M A, Zyzanski S J, Murray T H, Stange K C
Department of Family Medicine, Case Western Reserve University, and the Center for Research in Family Practice and Primary Care, Cleveland, Ohio 44106, USA.
Med Care. 2000 Dec;38(12):1200-9. doi: 10.1097/00005650-200012000-00007.
Participatory decision-making (PDM), a widely held ideal, depends on physician facilitation of patient participation. However, little is known about how PDM facilitation is actualized in outpatient primary care.
The objective of this study was to describe the prevalence of physician facilitation of PDM in community family practices and associated physician, patient, and visit characteristics.
This was a cross-sectional observational study.
The study included 3,453 patients seen by 138 family physicians in 84 community practices.
Research nurses directly observed PDM facilitation in consecutive adult outpatient visits. The association between PDM facilitation and patient, physician, and visit characteristics was assessed with multilevel multivariable regression.
PDM facilitation occurred during 25% of observed patient visits. Rates varied considerably among physicians, from 0% to 79% of visits. Patient satisfaction was not associated with PDM facilitation. In multivariable analyses, employed physicians, chronic illness visits, longer visit duration, and visits involving referral were independently associated with PDM facilitation. Visits in which greater time was spent planning treatment and conducting health education were also more likely to involve facilitation of PDM.
Community family physicians facilitate PDM at highly variable rates but focus it on patients with the greatest medical needs and most complex levels of decision making. This selective approach appears to meet patient expectations, because PDM facilitation and patient satisfaction are not associated. If patient participation is to be more widely incorporated into outpatient primary care, it must be addressed within the complexity and multiple demands of community practice.
参与式决策(PDM)是一种广泛认可的理想模式,它依赖于医生促进患者参与。然而,对于在门诊初级保健中如何实现PDM促进措施,我们知之甚少。
本研究的目的是描述社区家庭医疗中医生促进PDM的普遍性以及相关的医生、患者和就诊特征。
这是一项横断面观察性研究。
该研究纳入了84个社区诊所中138名家庭医生诊治的3453名患者。
研究护士在连续的成人门诊就诊中直接观察PDM促进情况。采用多水平多变量回归评估PDM促进与患者、医生和就诊特征之间的关联。
在25%的观察到的患者就诊中发生了PDM促进。医生之间的发生率差异很大,从0%到79%不等。患者满意度与PDM促进无关。在多变量分析中,在职医生、慢性病就诊、就诊时间较长以及涉及转诊的就诊与PDM促进独立相关。在计划治疗和进行健康教育上花费更多时间的就诊也更有可能涉及PDM促进。
社区家庭医生促进PDM的发生率差异很大,但将其重点放在医疗需求最大且决策水平最复杂的患者身上。这种选择性方法似乎符合患者期望,因为PDM促进与患者满意度无关。如果要将患者参与更广泛地纳入门诊初级保健,就必须在社区实践的复杂性和多重需求中加以解决。